EXHIBITS

The West Side Community After the Interstate  

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Hotel Utah established a Motor Lodge on West Temple catering to automobile travelers in 1958 on West Temple. Courtesy of the Utah State Historical Society. 

The West Side Community After the Interstate 

State and local government agencies razed just under 10 percent of the west side’s residential and industrial buildings in order to make a path for the interstate.[1] That impact shaped the west side for years to come as residents responded to the freeway as a permanent concrete shadow over their community. 

Population Shifts 

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Population density map and projection from the 1972 Salt Lake Area Transportation Study. Courtesy of the Utah State Archives. 

Population shifts through the decades following the construction of the freeway saw population density directly along the interstate grow at a much slower rate than communities on the east side.[2]  

Endnotes:

[1] Brad Westwood, “Twentieth and Twenty-first Century Pioneer Park Neighborhood Developments,” Department of Cultural & Community Engagement, accessed June 1, 2023, https://community.utah.gov/twentieth-and-twenty-first-century-pioneer-park-neighborhood-developments/ 

[2] Utah Department of Highways, Salt Lake Area Transportation Study, Salt Lacke City, Utah, 1972, 10-11. 

[3] “Staffer to Gain New House,” The Salt Lake Tribune, January 31, 1974; Paul Swenson, “Whitewash? Hogwash! This Plan’s For Real,” Deseret News, October 14, 1971; “Transportation Commission Honors Peoples Freeway Inc Garden Project,” Salt Lake Times, December 19, 1975.